Lethbridge Herald

Pentagon sends troops to border

5,200 TROOPS SENT TO U.S.-MEXICO BORDER WEEK BEFORE MIDTERMS

- Robert Burns, Colleen Long and Jill Colvin

The Pentagon said Monday it is sending 5,200 troops to the Southwest border in an extraordin­ary military operation ordered up just a week before midterm elections in which President Donald Trump has put a sharp focus on Central American migrants moving north in slowmoving caravans that are still hundreds of miles from the U.S.

The number of troops being deployed is more than double the 2,000 who are in Syria fighting the Islamic State group.

Trump, eager to keep voters focused on illegal immigratio­n in the lead-up to the elections, stepped up his dire warnings about the caravans, tweeting, “This is an invasion of our Country and our Military is waiting for you!”

But any migrants who complete the long trek to the southern U.S. border already face major hurdles — both physical and bureaucrat­ic — to being allowed into the United States.

In an interview Monday, Trump said the U.S. would build “tent cities” for asylum seekers.

“We’re going to put tents up all over the place,” told Fox News Channel’s Laura Ingraham. “They’re going to be very nice and they’re going to wait and if they don’t get asylum, they get out.”

Under current protocol, migrants who clear an initial screening are often released until their cases are decided in immigratio­n court, which can take several years.

Trump denied his focus on the caravan is intended to help Republican­s in next week’s midterms, saying, “This has nothing to do with elections.”

The Pentagon’s “Operation Faithful Patriot” was described by the commander of U.S. Northern Command as an effort to help Customs and Border Protection “harden the southern border” by stiffening defences at and near legal entry points. Advanced helicopter­s will allow border protection agents to swoop down on migrants trying to cross illegally, said Air Force Gen. Terrence O’Shaughness­y.

Troops planned to bring heavy concertina wiring to unspool across open spaces between ports.

“We will not allow a large group to enter the U.S. in an unlawful and unsafe manner,” said Kevin McAleenan, commission­er of Customs and Border Protection.

Eight hundred troops already are on their way to southern Texas, O’Shaughness­y said, and their numbers will top 5,200 by week’s end. Some of the troops will be armed. He said troops would focus first on Texas, followed by Arizona and then California.

The troops will join the more than 2,000 National Guardsmen that Trump has already deployed to the border. It remained unclear Monday why the administra­tion was choosing to send active-duty troops given that they will be limited to performing the same support functions the Guard already is doing.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? A new group of Central American migrants wade in mass across the Suchiate River that connects Guatemala and Mexico, in Tecun Uman, Guatemala, Monday. The first group was able to cross the river on rafts — an option now blocked by Mexican Navy river and shore patrols.
Associated Press photo A new group of Central American migrants wade in mass across the Suchiate River that connects Guatemala and Mexico, in Tecun Uman, Guatemala, Monday. The first group was able to cross the river on rafts — an option now blocked by Mexican Navy river and shore patrols.

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